DON'T FAIL TO COME TO THE flOBESON OUNTY FAIR THIS WEEK. WATCH TOUR LABEL AND SEND IN RE ' NEWAL BEFORE TOUR SUBSCRIPTION EXPIRES, ' VOL. Lin. wo. P St&Q c All Set for ;y dpciiiris of .Fair ir Will Ooen Tues dav mnd Run Through .Friday Fonr Day And Nights of Pleasure . as well as rjoiu w ov ni v-rmTWSnAY AND 'i . CHILDREN DAY FRIDAY " ' The eighth annual Robeson county fair will open nere- Tomorrow at , and run thrniiffh Fridav. Indi- . .'tinna nnint to' tha "biggest ' and .Vnat" air 4rt the MstorV of the Robe ' Conniv Fair Association. While no program' has been announced by the management; the gates will open aUv t 9 a m and -7:30 p. m. and four days and nights of gaiety and fun are promised. i - - ? : - t , , Fireworks Display rAside from jthe exhibits, agricuF tural and,, industrial, , the Matthew J. Riley shows will make up the midway attractions. "A. display Oof ; fireworks .will take place on Wednesday,. Thurs day and Friday nights,- beginning at 9 o'clock 'and lasting for one hour. While these displays will cost several hundred dollars, they will be a part the free entertainment for fair visitors,. ."':.-;-..-lioy and Children's ' Bays . 'ihursuay will toe "tfaby Day", and as has been the case . at previous fairs, $h'e labjr show will be a special feature. Friday - "ill bo "Children's Day'' and all school children will be admitted Iree from 10 a,'', in. to 3 p. t Thousands of children are expect to attend the fair on that day. Reduced Railroad Rates Reduced rates will be .given (n all railroads leading into. Lumberton dift fcg the fair and thousands of people e expested : to attend daily. Your friends Will be at the fair. Meet them there. ' " -. . f E. McPhaul Order ed Held Under Bond Coroner's Jury Finds That ? Skipper Was " Pushed off of Car Amount of Bond to be Determined at Hear ing Tomorrow. " I i . "We find that Sellers Skipper came to his death by beinar Igocked of f an automobile by. Ernest :KwuL We recommend tW Eimest McPhaul be held f of further investigation by high, er court under a very y reasonable bThis was the, verdict rendered by the coroner's jury conducted Wednes day 'and Thursday of last week over the remains of Sellers Skipper, who died in the Pittman hospital, Fay etteville, Tuesday afternoon of last week. As has been stated.in The Robe sonian, Skipper, 37-year-old barber of Red Springs, was found m a road in , "Black i Bottom!, .a suburb .-'of:. Red Springs about - 8 o'clock o Sunday night, October . 1, in an unconscious condition. He died without regaining consciousness. McPhaul, young, white man, who lives in Hoke county, was arrested on the day that Skipper died. He has been in the custody of Robeson coun ty officers since his arrest and is now in the county jail here. Several wit nesses testified -before the Coroners jury that they sawMcPhaul and Skip per in s car on Sunday afternoon pre vious to the finding of Skipper in the road. The inquest was conducted by DrVE. Rt Hardin county health of ficer and coroner.: , , . A habeas ' corpus hearing before Judge W. M. Bond tomorrow wiU de termine the amount of bond required of McPhaul. . ; ;,- " BOLT NOMINEE OF MEETING B E. Britt Will be Independent -Can. "didate for Road Supervisor f Wish arts Tom Monroe Nominated at ; Township Meeting Mr! B E. Britt has entered the field as a bolting 'candidate for road supervisor of Wisharts township. - At ' a nm-partisan township meet ing held Saturday Mr. Tom Monroe was nominated for road supervisor, to be voted on in the November elec tion. -Mr! Rowland Mercer as the only ther candidate. ' ' , . , Since the meeting, however, friends of Mr. Britt have offered him support as an-independent candidate and have prevailed upon Mm, to enter' the race. So voters of Wisharts ynll choose on November 7 between two candidates, one the nominee of a township meet ing and the other a free lance. Cotton Gin Destroyed by Fire. Fire of unknown origin destroyed a .cotton ginnery at McDonald on Sun-' day night, October 1. The cotton anc seed houses, erected, near by, were al so destroyed, together with one bale of ginned cotton and several hundred pounds. Of seed cotton. The gins and other houses destroyed belonged to Mr. H. G. Stubbs of-' Fairmont. The loss totaled several thousand dollars, partly covered by insurance. :,' Britts Defeats Road Bond Issue. . -Britts township Thursday roted down a $20,000 road bond issue, the vote being 4 'for the, Issue and 161 against. The total " registration was 1 258, which means that the issue lack ed 126 votes of being carried. i jLlLJELd Rev. L. R. Farmer n Declared Pastor Crippled Preacher.Wins in Big Color ;ed Church Row and Ret. Hooper is - Restrained From Acting Nauf hty Toward His Brother Divider Mighty Row Which Shook the Elect of, Pine Hill Baptist and Reverter ated AU' Arund Maxton Comes to ' Close ' i . Rev. L. R. Farmer. D. D.. colored divider of the Word, is by the find ing of a, Robeson county , jury ; of twelve good men and true the duly elected pastor of Pine Hill Baptist church, hard by y Maxton -;.town, and ' Rev. ' D. A. Hooper, erst While shepherd of the same flock who repented him for that he received in to his bosom, as it were, the afore said Rev. Farmer, is permanently re strained by order of the court from molesting Rev. Farmer in the dis charge? of the duties of and in the enjoyment of the emoluments apper taining to the pastorate aforesaid. Know all men by these presents that these things are true. , Thus endeth. a famous church trial which 'made a Superior court judge squirm upon the bench for the space oi. two and a han" -days; which for the p3ir.e space ci "uae held the un divided attention of a cloud of wit nesses; in which four kjjnl lights sparred keenly over every incii of the ground; whish, brought to town, ar rayed in their now-and-thens, many cf the elect of Pine Hill Baptist, which . said elect and all and sundry oi the colored persuation had the time of their lives; in the course nf which much ground was, covered between Louisiana and the White House at Washington, an alleged letter from President Harding and 1 an . " alleged trial of a -dusky sister for . alleged participation in or guilty knowledge of the assassination of President Mc. K'nley figuring darkly therein; and out of the maze and tangle of which an alleged root doctor, fortune-teller and prophet, alleged to have said that hs had risen from, the dead after three, days,' that superhuman trick having .. been turned by the potency of a high.Masonic sign, emerged vic tor i Sisterin and brudders. to relate all that was said and preached and sung and laughed at this trial would make a book of size. Brief let the story be. Knuwthen, that it wasr in-: eVldenee that when this Year of. Grace had grown but into its second month the Rev. Farmer, a negro much crippled as to hi left leg and left arm, relict of a railroad wreck, who walks with difficulty on crutches, having his local habitation in Hoke county, held a protracted meeting at Pine Hill at the invitation of Rev. Hooper, the then pastor. Rev, Farmer preached with unction and with power, eaptivating his hearers, and" Rev. Hooper resigned the pastorate of the church, saying that - God had caHed Rev. Farmer to that church and that he, Rev. Hooper, had all the churches lie could pastor, in Bladen county AU1 went merry as a marriage bell for some months, when, in the budding month of April, Rev. Hooper seems to have develop ed a yearning for his former flock. Then things began to happen.- Rev. Hooper, so the evidence ran, wrote to Farmer a brotherly letter in which he gently revealed to Rev. Farmer his intention to make something exceed ingly unpleasant happen to him if he attempted to darken the door of Pine Hill again, . which unpleasantness would go to the extreme of causing (Continued On Page Fourj - Sealed Ballot Box Found in G. Marsh It Contained 200 Tickets ' Same as Those Used in Primary Last Jane Ballots Have Every Appearance of Having Been Cast by Voters Would Have Changed Result of Re corder for St. Pauls. A se&led ballot box containing 200 county tickets, the same as those used in the rrimary last June, and said to have eeh found in the Great Marsh, near St. Pauls, late Saturday afternoon, was brought to Lumber ton Saturday night by Mr. Oscar Prevatt "and a young man named Ratley. Messrs. Prevatt and- Ratley said they fund the box in the marsh. The box was opened in the office of Sheriff R. E. Lewis and the ballots appeared to have been placed in the box by voters. ' .' A count of the vote for recorder tho St Paula district as shown on the tickets in the box- gave Mr. Jno. !. Butler 124 and Mr. Marcus bmitn fi. These tickets ' eave the vote for Sheriff as follows: R. E. La wis, 113; B. F. McMillan, 8L Official returns from St. Pauls gave Lewis 165, Mc Millan 345. . - V; Mr Butler, one of the candidates for recorder of the St. Pauls district filed complaint with the cunty board of elections immediately .after" the primary , and a recount of the . vote, sworn to ny tne pou-noiaers. gave r 'Smith a maioritv of 11 votes ve"r Mr. Butle and he was declared the nominee. , - '; When seen by a Robe soman report- er today, Mr. cucier saia ne naa no statement to make about the finding of the ballot box. . m LULIBE2T0N, N. HOIIDAY, .OCTOBER 9, 1822. Portrait of Late dgcTiffiMcNcffl: to if.- fV. 4V Splendid "6i'Paratia.r'f;Form'Vi:;Dia. U tiugHished Citizen Now,. Adorns. Wall . in Court. Room Presented by Bar of - County Vat Impressive vCetirt v;. Session Thursday -Evening Ad- ' dress Delivered by A. W. McLean and Portrait Accepted by Judge W. M. Bond. PORTRATT OF LATE G. B: PAT- TERSON WILL BE, PRESENTED A ' representative : "audience . -which filled the; court. roomi.:attended2; the nresentation Thursday eveninir to thC county of-a strikingly; handsome potr trait of the late- Judge Thomas ,Al- esander McNeilL''' whose, .long' 'and honorable ca reer came to a close August 2nd, 1921. There was about the occasion: in such - marked degree the tame sort of rare charm and grace. and unaffected dignity that; at all times fitted like a familiar garment the distinguished gentleman in whose honor it was held, that one could but feel that his benignant spirit had de scended upon those who had gathered there. , - 1 ; Hon. A. W. McLean made the ad- drefs of 'presentation for the Robe son county bar and the portrait, a fine oil painting by Mrs. Fahey of Washington, D. C., was accepted tov the county by Judge W. M. Bond of Edenton, presiding at this tern ot court, Judge Bond in structed the clerk . of the . court to set apart a page of the court min utes for an . appropriate record of the proceedings of the evening and that the portrait be hung permanently up on the walls of the court room Judge Bond ' also gave eloquent testimony to the noble character and notable public service of . the - deceased and declared that it wasvaltogether fitting that men should pause in the hurried life of the present and thus honor a man whose life was worthy of. emula tion and place a permanent memorial of him in the temple of justice as an inspiration to the present and future generations. He expressed the appre ciation of the court for the excep tionally : well-prepared , address de livered- by 'Mr.'-McLekn. - y . Distinguished and Learned ( '' Mr. McLean's address was indeed gem. most appropriate, ; complete, well-rounded and eloquent, portraying the characteristics of Judge McNeill as faithfully as the artist ha placed upon canvass the physical likeness. "The Cape Fear , section of North Carolina", said the speaker, "has pro duced many men who have distin guished ' themselves inv-one -- ;more Fines of human endeavor. It has pro duced strong ministers of the gospel, able ; lawyers, " distinguished judges, statesmen, and others who nave Achieved success in the . f lelas of science, letters and. the creative arts. Judge Thomas Alexander McNeill was one of the most... distinguished and learned men that this section of the state has produced. Though modesty, which was a cardinal trait ; in his character, caused him to spend his life in the neighborhood of .his birth place, his nearly eighty years of use. ful service to his community and to the state bear eloquent testimony to the fact that his life and works are comparable . with those of Any of his fellows who may have . sought and won higher stations in other fields." Here the sneaker launched into the genealogy of the deceased, tracing his descent from a virile ancestry, and sketched oustanding incidents of his life his early training in a godly home, his father, Rev. Hector Mc Neill, having been a distinguished Presbyterian minister; his life during his1 early .years on a farm in what is now Scotland county, where he devel oped into a fine specimen of physical manhood; his patriotic service during the Civil War: his later career - as lawyer, legislator, Judge and citizen ;J his high moral character which maae his name a synonym for integrity; his keen interest, which he retained to the last, in every movement that had for its object the betterment of condi tions in his town, county, state and nation. " ' No Higher Compliment t"To his unusual physkal charms", said the speaker, "were "added vigor of ' intellect, sturdiness of character, and a Consciousness of civic duty-that made Judge McNeill worthy to be truly called a representative citizen iri every sense thai the words connote. After all, no higher eompliment can be paid to any man." - Mr. McLean was associated with Judge' McNeill for a number of years in . the practice of the law, and dur ing that time, he said, he met many of Judge McNeill's old comrades of war days, who made it a rule to call to see him when they came to town. He heard them "relate many stories of his conspicious bravery, "' which they, said gave him everlasting re noun among his comrades." J Fired Last Shot at Fort Fisher One of these stories was about en incident that happened , when Fort Fisher fell.' A combined sea and- land attack in January, 1865, made it im possible for the Confederates station. .-) (Continued On Page Four) U'W .! Kx! I A M mmmmmmmmmm . , ,1 . . ,1, ,1, ii " i n r mimji THE LATB JUDGE THOMAS ALEI - ANDER McNEILL- ' v , r : A large oil paintiha of Tudtre Mc Neill was presented to the county by the Robeson county bar at a session of court held Thursday evening, Judge W; M. Bond presiding. The speech of nrfsentation was made by Hon. A. W. McLean. The portrait hangs above the judge's stand in the court room. V i "ii i in. Will of Late Dr. N. A. Thompson Beneficiaries Outside Family Include 1 2 Churches, 3 Orphanages, Nurses, . Colored Employees and a Special i Friend. . The will of the late Dr. N. A. Thompson provides that the Firs Baptist church of Lumberton, of which he was a member, the Lumber- ton Presbyterian church, the Oxford Masonic orphanage, the Thomasville Baptist orphanage and the Barium Springs Presbyterian orphanage be paid $100 each from his 'estate. Others oeneficianes of the will besides mem. bers of the immediate family are: Each student nurse who had been aii employee of the deceased continu ously for one year at the time of hit death, $35: each student nurse who had been an employee continu ously for two years, $50; each gradu ate nurse who had been an employed continuously for one year: $40: each Igtiduate nurse Who had been an em ployee continuously for to - years, $60. Mrs. Lucy Holmes, office assist ant, comes in for the same amunt as a graduate nurse. "Each . colored servant who had been an employee continuously for one year, $25,'-and those who had . been employes con tinuously for two years, $50 each. The will also charges the executors to see that no colored servant "who has served,, us", shall want ' in . case - they become incapiated for work and that none of them lack for a decent burial Mr, G, E. Rancke. Jr.,. is bequeath ed $250 ;;?as v a slight token f the esteem in which I always held him." The Planters Bank & Trust Co., of which deceased' was president at the time, of. his death, and Mrs. Kate G. Thompson, wido .of deceased, are named as executors of the will.. Better Headway Made iri Paving Elm Opened to Traffic to Eleventh and Asphalt May be Spread to 15th by Tuesday Night Chestnut to be Paved Next-',. Much headway has been made in Lumberton's paving program during the last week. The paving on Fourth, between Chestnut and Walnut, was opened to traffic some 10 days ago The concrete base has been laid on North - Elm between Sixth and the town limits. Nineteenth street. As phalt has been spread on North Elm from Sixth 'to Eleventh and this sec tion' has been opened to traffic. It , is expected that the asphalt will have been extended to Fifteenth by Tues day night. If the .concrete base on Elm between Fifteenth and Nine teenth is in good condition this street will be opened to traffic from Wed nesday morning until the close of the fair. '. j Gravel shipments are arriving in ore regularly now and it is expected that the paving work , will progress more rapidly. ! The laying of concrete base on Fourteenth, between Elm and Walnut, was begun today. The next street to be paved is Chestnut." be tween Sixth and Fourteenth, this to be followed by the ' paving of the Luzabethtown road,, between Elm and Wralnut." When this paving is completed the congestion of traffic in the northern part of town will be re lieved. Mr. W. H.; Taylor of Wisharts township was a Lumberton visitor this morning. Cotton Gia and Sawmill Burned by Lightning. . - A cotton gin and saw mill belong ing to Mr. C. C. Carter, near Shan non, were burned - Saturday night when struck by. lightning,- according to Mr. J. Warren Currie of Bt, Red Springs, who is a Lumberton risitr today. . .... - - -..; V COUHTfcY. COO AMD TKOTK. t ; Plapinglterialr for-NHkfi'School Building at Fairmont New Building to" Cost $80,000 Will Relieve' Present ; Congested Condi- , tions--Mefhodlsts Preparing to Ba tions Methodists . - Preparing to Build Large New Church Death of Mrs. Jas. T." White DiphtherU Epidemic Thought to be Over. . Bv II. V. Brown - Fairmont, Oct 7. Material is being placed on the large lot on Iona street, between Trinity and Pittman, pre paratory to the erection of th nw Fairmont high school building. Str eral car loads of brick have been un loaded and other materials are ex pected daily.. The building wilt cost approximately $80,000 when complet ed and .furnished. Conditions at the old building are such that the pupils are not getting favorable accommoda tions, some of the classes being crowded so that the teacher cnnnt give the students all the necessary attention. This situation will b en tirely relieved with the erection of the new building. Methodists Will Build .New Church Several large trees h&va bomnt down on the lot belonging , to the Methodist church; and it is under stood that a . large new Methodist church will be built on this lot fn the near future. This will be diagonally across the street from the school building' and will necessarily make Iona street one of the mnnt-imnnrt. ant in town. Just when the actual worK win begin has not been learned yet. The condition of Mr. E. 'Fiaher doesn't seem to get much better. while no considerable chftno-e tnr th worse has taken place. ' His ' many friends are anxious for his recovery. He has been taking special treatment for the past several months. Mr; v. McDaniel, who has been taking special treatment in a .Rich mond sanatorium, was able to return home last Thnrsdav'niefht. Hi manv friends were glad to see him on the streets again Friday. Mrs. Jas. T. White Passes The death of Mrs Jab. T. Whit. Sr last Tuesday at the' White home here on North Main street terminated a long illness. Deceased was an elderly woman who held the respect of all ,who Jam .her; a.ndahougii.r she , had not been active in the church and so cial life of the- town in her last years she was loved by many And was a faithful church woman: Informant w made in the family burying plot of me rairmonc cemetery. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jones, at Thomnson's hosoital in Lnmtartnn last Monday, a' girl, Alice Page. frevatte BuUock, who have been operating a barber shop in one of the Brice buildings on Center street. moved to the Floyd buildings on Mam srreet, jir. John v. Purvis, who con ducts a ' tailoring business, has 1 also moved into the Floyd building, which was formerly occupied by S. S Zydan, who ran a cafe. The building has been divided in half by a partition. Many Cases of Diphtheria ' A great number of cases of diph theria has .been reported in town dur ing the last ten days. Several grown people1 have suffered with tho Area A disease while lots of children have been sufferers. No new cases have been reported in the lat few Avm and it is thought that the epidemic is at its close. The N. W. Jenkins Co., which bought the stock of the defunct Fair. mont Supply Co., is staging a mam moth sale which is considered one of the greatest in the . historv nf thi section of the county. A special west- ,.1.. A n .u 1 1 , dm tyinpaiiy is nanaiing ine sale and much success is reported by Mr. Jenkins, manager. Mrs. Alice Brice spent part of last week in Charlotte, where she visited friends and relatives and attended the Made-In-Carolinas exposition She was accompanied by her brother," Mr. Vardell Grantham, who extended his trip to Statesville. They returned this week. McDonald Seeks to Oust Lyon from Congress. : Wilmington Star: W. J. McDonald, of Fayetteville, is seeking Congress man Homer Lyon's seat in congress on the Republican ticket, according to letters received by voters in Wil mington. Mr. McDonald calls altention of voters to the majorities of the Re publican party in both branches of congress, and says there is a need for this district to have a representative ot the dominant party to represent them in Washington. He also bases his appeal on the grounds that it is time the agricul tural business interests are given renresentation in fiAnma.. f .... ,.- .7 11UIU LUIS district November Tern of Court Will Begin ' 8th. The November term of Superior conrt far tha trial n .: i . - -- ,. uuiuuu vases will convene on Wednesday, Novem ber 8, instead of Monday, November S. This change has been made on ac- ..t..i . M .1 a.! . . . cuiuu.u mecuon tiay on Tuesday, November 7. Jurors need , not report until Wednesday. -. - i . " Mr Jos. Clark of Pembroke was a Lumberton visitor this morning. . ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS ; . A RE DISCONTINUE . ED WHEN TIIET EXPIRE 1 WATCH TOUR LA BIX a.X A TtAJt, DUK n ADVANCE " Cotton Market Reported by j; "rfT Bartingto; Middlfnir enftn u eal market today at 21 cents the Items of Local Newa Thanks' for th riiitW .' fore the opening of the county fair. uncase naa oeen issued tot the marriage of Mrs. Vivfan ir?nTaw Harry Daniel Bowers. . The Jacob and Back i wamp drahv aare tax books hav hwn to Sheriff R. E. Lewis for collection. Born. Wednejwfav nlrht nt lam' week, At the Baker sanatorium, to Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Stuart of R. 2, Rowland, . a daughter, weight 11 pounds. . . A- near fight, following a poli tical argument on Elm street, in front of Mr. L. IL Caldwell's depart ment store, marked the opening of the 1922 campaign in Lumberton late Saturday afternoon. Connecting pipes from the new reservoir at the local filter plant to the water, lines are beiny installed and it is expected that the "cut over from the old to the new will be made Wednesday of this week. Miss Albertine Duncan, hd has been taking, training at Cumberland General Hospital in Fayetteville, is sick with Malarial fever at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Duncanfr in Howellsville township. The Registration dates for the November election run from Satur day of last week through Saturday, October 28. Mr. Ge. W. Lennon is registrar in South Lumberton and Mr. R. A. Mclntyre in North Lumber ton. ' t , .',;-..- y - : - - . Mr. Bunyan Floyd, who was seriously hurt on August 7th. last, when an A. C. L. train struck his car at' a rad crossing in Orrum, is expected to leave the Thompson hos piUlthis week. Ha has been a patient at tha hospital since the day of the accident,!; .:: --r, i , --Prof. J. R. Poole, county super intendent of public instruction, and Prof. W. B. Crumpton, Jr superin tendent of the Lumberton schools, at tended Friday and Saturday in Wil mington. A district convention of, county . , , and city school superin tendents -':t-.''vr--v.-yf,;?; ?-jtt?w seats wiU be Installed to both the white and colored waiting rooms At the union station this week. The seats have, already arrived here and are made of oak wood. Mr. A. P. Mitchell, local Seaboard agent, has been trying for several months to get the new seats. ' , Mr. A. E. White Thursday sold the building occupied by The Robe sonian to Mr. Jno. D. McMillan,' the consideration being $7,500. The : ad joining building, occupied by the J. D. Quick drift store, .was sold recently by Mr. Ira B. Townsend to Mr. S. D. Sanderson for $4,500. - Not in the history of farming in-, this section of the State have the farmers . had' finer weather during September than' during September of this year for harvesting crops. The hay crop, which it is generally ad mitted was the largest ever- "saved' in Robeson county, has practically been harvested. The major portion of the cotton crop has also been "housed." FIRE AT ST, PAULS SUNDAY. . Early Mrning Fire Damages Stock of Ebam & Son $9,000 or $104100 . and Badly Damages Building, Special to The Robesonian. St. Pauls, Oct 9. Fire of undeter. mined origin damaged the dry goods stock of Ebam & Son here abut 4 o'clock Sunday morning. The damage to the stock is estimated at between $9,000 and $10,000, with $5,000 in surance. The building- owned by Mr. Jess Odum, was badly damaged. - Turks Are Expected to Accept Allied Demands. Mudania, Oct. 8. Associated Press.) The allies presented a united front on their return to Mudania at 10 o'clock tonight and the feeling of all three delegations was that Ismet Pasha would be forced yield.- The delegation expressed optimism , regarding the outcome and there was little doubt that the Turks Would ae- ; cept the allied demands leaving the . question of likitation of the Turkish t i gendarmerie only as a possibility, of friction. , : A New Animal Discovered. A new animal has been discovered by Mr. G. B. Wishart, who lives on R. 3 fjrom Lumberton. While the "liv ing creature" resembles both a ground , mole and a woods rat, he is neither. Mr.- Wishart thinks this new speci-f men of the animal kingdom is a cross ' between a mole and a rat He brought -the curiosity to town Friday, but was unable to find one who had seen hia ' like before. - Baseball at Pembroke Wednesday Correspondence of The Robesonian, Pembroke, Oct 9. There will be a ball game played at Pembroke Wed nesday of this week between Pem broke and Camp Bragg 5th F.f A. This will be the last game of the eea. son. Don't miss it "